X-Arcade MAME Dual Controller Rated 146
VL writes "Keyboards and mice are great for gaming, but sometimes you need something old school... especially when playing those MAME classics - here's ViperLair's review of the X-Arcade dual controller." X-Arcade also makes a single-player version, and a sturdy-looking trackball.
How will kids of taday handle that (Score:1)
Re:How will kids of taday handle that (Score:1)
Re:How will kids of taday handle that (Score:2)
Rampart! (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:this is headline news? (Score:1)
But when you think of it, controllers and the likes have been around for a long time, and there has been very little innovation (except for them biofeedback ones i saw a while back, that was kind cool, Click Here for more [slashdot.org]).
What else can we expect?
Re:this is headline news? (Score:3, Insightful)
(User vl has never even made a post)
It is either sad that slashdot editors don't pick up on this or worse they know and are intentionally supporting it...
paid placement (Score:2)
Re:this is headline news? (Score:2)
If you're going to explain an abbreviation you use only once, is it really worth it?
Re:this is headline news? (Score:5, Interesting)
Not only has the damn thing been out for more than a year, there are already dozens of reviews [google.com] posted, many from more reputable sources. As you can see, pretty easy to find them too.
I've just learned to expect that every day or so a story like this will slip through. It'd be one thing to announced that the trackball has actually shipped (something a lot of people have been waiting for for a long time!) - that'd be news, honestly. But a new review of their base controller that those who need already have? No, this is not news. I was disappointed when I clicked through; I thought this must be a new product.
Re:this is headline news? (Score:3, Insightful)
The pictures they have are of the older model, but you look at the Arcade PC, you can see the one with Track Ball.
I own both the X-Arcade controller and the Hot Rod and the Hot Rod is a better product overall than the X-Arcade.
Not only that, you get a lot of the original Capcom games with the controller.
Re:this is headline news? (Score:2)
BTW, I built my own arcade stick and several adapters (Dreamcast, PS/2, and PC). I probably spe
Re:this is headline news? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:this is headline news? (Score:5, Insightful)
Obviously, the parts in this thing aren't cheap, and since it's a fairly small-run item, each customer has to bear a significant portion of the manufacturing costs. Still, there are a lot of kids who cut their teeth on '80s arcade games who are just now becoming sucessful in the corporate world. These people have money to spend, and are willing to spend it to create a nostalgic experience.
Basically, it's a hobby item. You might not spend $5000 on an elaborate model train setup, but there are enough model train fanatics in the world to support a small industry. The situation with the X-arcade is similar - while the customer base certainly isn't mainstream or huge, it is dedicated, has money, and is large enough to support an (apparently) successful business producing replica arcade controllers for the PC.
Re:this is headline news? (Score:3, Informative)
I'm sure the X-arcade uses microswitches like the modern arcade machines, but REAL arcade machines use leaf switches.
Re:this is headline news? (Score:2)
if you do, YOU ARE THE MAN.
Re:this is headline news? (Score:3, Informative)
Personally I use an Asciiware Playstation stick, which has eight buttons plus start and select. The buttons use pretty nasty bubble switches, but I prefer it over the Dreamcast one because the stick has a longer shaft and a slightly smaller ball that fits better into my small, girlish hands.
Re:this is headline news? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:this is headline news? (Score:3, Interesting)
While this may be true today (I haven't played a game in an arcade in years) it wasn't true 20 years ago. I have a Ms Pac cocktail in my dining room, an original Midway (not some brand new copy like they're now selling.) The original joysticks used leaf switches as opposed to micro switches. The difference in game play is pretty big IMHO. There is nothing like flying around t
Re:this is headline news? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:this is headline news? (Score:2)
Let's see:
2 8-way joysticks : 30
18 push buttons : 32
1 1/8" drill bit : 7
1/2 sheet melamine: 12
Melamine edging : 5
Melamine saw blade: 8
iPac kybd encoder : 43
Piano hinge : 2
Wire : free
Misc. hardware : 1
-----------------------
Total : $140
$140. If I were to do it again, I would just buy one of the pre-made units that pretty much use the exact same components that
Re:this is headline news? (Score:2)
Re:this is headline news? (Score:2)
Re:this is headline news? (Score:2)
That's a nice looking panel, but $850? That's outrageous. I'm working on two cocktail cabinets right now. I have spent $40 each for my IPACs and $30 each for the controls. (2 joysticks, 12 player buttons, Player 1 and player 2 buttons, and a couple extra. Excluding the computer equipment, I won't be spending $850 for both cabinets.
Controls [dreamarcades.com]
IPAC [gamecabinetsinc.com]
old school? (Score:4, Funny)
cowabunga man! totally tubular..!
Re:old school? (Score:1)
How is your sk8ter boi?
Looks great! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Looks great! (Score:2)
Re:Looks great! (Score:2)
Re:Looks great! (Score:1)
Re:Looks great! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Looks great! (Score:1)
Re:Looks great! (Score:2)
Re:Looks great! (Score:2)
In order to play it "right" (read classic machine feel) you'd need a 4 way leaf joystick... failing that you could use an 8 way joystick with a restrictor that doesn't allow you to move diagonal.
It's not MAME's/software issue, it's a hardware issue. Saying PacMan won't let you use diagonal on the corners is like saying defender won't let me go left or right on the joystick(yes you can remap it in mame, i meant in the arcade) or Space I
wonderful. (Score:3, Informative)
IANAET (English teacher) but I'm mortified (Score:5, Funny)
Proofreading: The Anti-Suck
build your own (Score:4, Interesting)
trackball for xbox? (Score:2, Interesting)
the x-arcade trackball.. (Score:3, Interesting)
there's been plenty of x-arcade reviews before, I'm not sure what's "new" about this one...
e.
kevin steele's retroblast review (Score:3, Interesting)
retroblast [retroblast.com] has the review (even has a video review with some cheeky production value) =)
e.
x-arcade dual sticks too close together (Score:3, Insightful)
I actually used x-arcade joystick and buttons (from an ebay auction... like 20 bucks for 2 happs super clone joysticks and 20 buttons) on my taito mame cabinet conversion [randomdrivel.com]
The buttons a
Rotary knob? (Score:3, Informative)
Major Havoc
Tempest
Tron (and DoT)
and maybe others...
Re:Rotary knob? (Score:2)
Anyone know of PC-compatible old style steering wheels that can spin 360 degrees?
Re:Rotary knob? -- oscarcontrols (Score:3, Informative)
All high quality stuff, and Oscar has been a great contributor to the Build Your Own Arcade Controls [arcadecontrols.com] community (msg board) [arcadecontrols.org] All the above links are great for info on making mame cabinet, desktop controller or otherwise interfacing "real" arcade controls with your PC.
e.
that things ok..but you can build your own too (Score:3, Interesting)
a M$ usb gamepad a soldering gun and some wood
and time.
you just solder onto the sidewinder pcb.. so that your pc thinks it's a sidewinder but the buttons and joysticks are old skool arcade ones.
Re:that things ok..but you can build your own too (Score:1)
Re:that things ok..but you can build your own too (Score:1)
Re:that things ok..but you can build your own too (Score:3, Informative)
Originally they were for the PSX. You take the PSX controller apart, and simply solder wires from the arcade buttons to the PSX controllers contacts. Very minimal electronics experience is necessary. You just need to know how to solder really.
Happ competition stick ~ $14 x 2
Happ competition button - $1.75 x 20
2 usb/gravis game pad/etc game pads for the guts ~$20 x 2
Wood/plastic/etc to make box out of ~ $10
If you want to roll your own,
Re:that things ok..but you can build your own too (Score:2)
Just build your own, it's very simple. (Score:5, Informative)
Please check it out, because it's a great project to do, and it's very simple, these X-Arcade and Hotrod guys are just raping people; you can build one of these dual sticks for about 20 dollars, and it's a lot of fun.
Re:Just build your own, it's very simple. (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Just build your own, it's very simple. (Score:2)
There are also more FAQs just about building a control panel at www.ArcadeControls.c
Re:Just build your own, it's very simple. (Score:1)
Further modifications: I suppose a clever EE could come along with a way to use one joystick rig and have one chip (?fpga) storing all the various pinouts/timing/configurations for different systems. Just flip the switch at boottime. would save on the cost of buying the scrap controllers.
(The linked site isn't any more elegant in their solution; they seem to have a variation
To be fair, I only skimmed your tutorial... (Score:4, Insightful)
1: I follow your tutorial. I buy a soldering iron and solder stuff. I have wires everywhere (and my wife is growing increasingly annoyed with my "project"). It takes me at least a couple days working after work on it. Crap, I messed something up. I solder some more. OK, I'm finished. Tada, working controller, albeit not very pretty because I'm not good at making things look nice. A couple months go by, it breaks after heavy use. Go back to the beginning.
2: I order the X-Arcade off the net. It arrives. I plug it in and play. A couple months go by and it breaks. I ship it back, they fix it for free. Repeat.
Sorry, but scenario 2 seems better to me. Maybe it's because I bought a mac, but I personally just want something that works and works now. I don't want to build my own. It's great that it can be done and that you did it. I'm sure you do (and should) take great pride in your accomplishment. But that's not what I'm looking for. I'll pony up the money if I don't have to dick around with making it myself. But that's just me.
-truth
I did build my own... (Score:2)
Re:Just build your own, it's very simple. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just build your own, it's very simple. (Score:2)
I wrote a tutorial a while back on building one of these control panels, and also building a cabinet to go with it. It's really very easy to wire up, you can see the buttons on the page linked in the story.
There are also lots of examples to follow on Build Your Own Arcade Controls [arcadecontrols.com]. The pages linked from here run the gamut from throwing a joystick and a few buttons into an old 1970's speakerbox to elaborate 4-player setups with plexiglass and full-color artwork that look like they were hand-crafted by the
For the full experience... (Score:5, Funny)
- the "clunk" of a controller that's been bashed slightly beyond its designated left/right/up/down extremes by a million users overdosed on Jolt and Mountain Dew
- the strange sticky feel that comes from having Coke dribbled into the controller drop by drop over several years
- the strange smell that comes from the carpets and walls of old video arcades. Male sweat + flatulence + cigarettes + dope +
- the smeared screen that's been touched by 1000 "helpers" trying to tell the game player what to do next
When it does all this, count me in!
Sticks like these are _not_ analog. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sticks like these are _not_ analog. (Score:2)
Re:Sticks like these are _not_ analog. (Score:2)
yea I wouldn't try to play halo on one, but that's a game designed with the Xbox controller in mind.
I've had one of these Xarcade setups for a couple years now, and I love it. It's relegated to PC only now, as I Have a Pelican stick that I use for the consoles. MIght ebay the Xarcade when I finish my cabinet...
What they really need... (Score:3, Insightful)
Using the keyboard is just not the same.
Re:What they really need... (Score:2)
Re:What they really need... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What they really need... (Score:1)
That would be the most awful way to play Tempest. I use the mouse. You just move the mouse left or right to spin. Still not close to the good old Tempest spin knob, but better than using a keyboard.
Speaking of Tempest, Tempest 2000 was my favorite game for the Atari Jaguar. Still pull that out every once and a while. Great soundtrack, too.
Re:What they really need... (Score:1)
I've never, ever, seen any controller that makes Tempest playable (other than the original, which comes preassembled with the rest of the game attached).
- JD
Re:What they really need... (Score:2)
Re:What they really need... (Score:1)
Perhaps this [griffintechnology.com] could do the job?
PowerMate... (Score:2)
Re:What they really need... (Score:1, Informative)
something like... (Score:2, Insightful)
Like a baseball and a bat?
Re:something like... (Score:1)
More games not controller (Score:2, Interesting)
Why get a controller if you can't even find games anymore??
Re:More games not controller (Score:3, Informative)
StarROMs [starroms.com]
alt.binaries.emulators.* Usenet groups
eMule [emule-project.net]
I'm sure there are many more.
Re:More games not controller (Score:1)
Re:More games not controller (Score:2)
http://www.freemameroms.com/ [freemameroms.com] is how I got my 4GBs worth of ROMs (a complete merged set) with over 3000 working roms.
Just USPSed a guy 7 discs, and a SASE about a week later I got my 7 discs back full of piping hot MAME goodness. Also, the set the guy that burned my set also sent almost all the flyers/marquee art, a bunch of wallpapers, etc. all kinds of neat stuff.
I guess it could be hit or miss on who you get to burn for you, but it worked for me, and what do you lose out if they don't return the discs,
Hanaho Hotrod-SE (Score:5, Informative)
-The controls on both units are spaced too closely. This makes it a little smaller overall than an arcade cabinet's control area, and forces you to get a bit too friendly with your neighbor. The 1-player X-Arcade's would solve this, but they're $99 each instead of the $150 for the dual unit, and with two one-player controls you lose the "feel" of that arcade machine.
-When using a USB->PS/2 adapter, the Hotrod's signal would get "jammed up". If a button or direction was pressed for about two seconds, it would stop responding, unless another button was pressed in there somewhere. Not a big problem with shooters where you're frequently mashing the fire button, but Street Fighter pained me sometimes. I had to abandon my idea of using iton my home theater computer through a USB hub wired in the rear of my livingroom (to minimize wiring), and instead had to run a big-ass PS/2 extension.
-The keys are all hard-wired equivalents of various buttons on the keyboard ('r', 6, etc.). One of these keys is, for no logical reason, 'alt', which MAME ignores but some emulators have an issue with.
-Shipping was $20 for ground, which was pretty damned irritating, as it represented 1/5 the cost of the controller. To be fair, I have no idea what the X-Arcade's shipping costs.
If I had a choice again, I would probably still stick with the Hanaho unit, though. For $50 the USB complaint is extremely minor, and the 'alt' problem can be worked around. I do lust after those adapters that would let me throw down some XBox soul caliber, though.
Re:Hanaho Hotrod-SE (Score:2)
I got one a few months ago; shipping was free.
Does this have a 49-way joystick for Sinistar? (Score:4, Insightful)
Really, folks, this is $150 we're talking about here. That's not chump change. I honestly expected more.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Does this have a 49-way joystick for Sinistar? (Score:2)
Trust me, if they had one of those on the X-arcade, you'd be paying a lot more. I have one of these, and it does fine for most games. Sure, there are going to be some exceptions. Heck, there is no Tron joystick or Star Wars flight yoke. But I know people w
Re:Does this have a 49-way joystick for Sinistar? (Score:2)
Keyboards and mice great for gaming? (Score:3, Insightful)
But a control pad is definitely not "old school" it has seen more innovations in the last decade in terms of responsiveness, force feedback, analog control, durability and ergonomics than any other input device in history. Just look at the PS2 controller in its third generation, look at the N64's, Gamecube and even the SNES pads, they ooze polishness and innovation at the beginning of each console's life-cycle.
Compare that to keyboards, which are not really designed for games and that haven't changed at all for how long? Twenty-something years? And what about the mouse? The middle button is not even standard! The scroll wheel seems to be achieving that status faster (but ooooh, we have optic mice now *drools*
Really, the "old school" devices here are the keyboard and mouse. They may work great with some games that are _designed_ around the limitations and advantages of those input devices, but if you want to see the future, look at the advances in HCI (Human-Computer Interaction) on game consoles, especially the upcoming portable ones.
Things like X-Arcade controllers will always have a market because they are input devices designed for games, not the other way around.
Re:Keyboards and mice great for gaming? (Score:2, Funny)
I thought Nintendo was a Japanese company, not Polish.
Not that great... (Score:3, Informative)
Difference between notebook and PS/2 keyboard (Score:1)
I had some program that lit up the key you were pressing or something...
What's the difference there?
X-Arcade Cabinet (Score:2, Interesting)
Better Australian alternative (Score:1, Informative)
It works in Linux and Windows as a keyboard - usb and ps2 and configurable with an I-PAQ controller inside. I don't need to configure anything in either OS whatsoever, it just works straight away.
I consider it to be a much more authentic and usable controller.
Site at http://home.iprimus.com.au/ozstick/ [iprimus.com.au]
Got one months ago, way worth the money (Score:2, Informative)
Controller with built in games. (Score:2)
Don't waste your money on X-Arcade OR I-Pac (Score:2)
$20 - 2 x 8-button USB joypads
$20 - 2 x 8-way joysticks from Happ Controls (on sale)
$16 - 16 x pushbuttons bought off the RGVAC newsgroup (I actually bought 20 for $20 but I u
MAME Classics? (Score:2)
Re:X-Arcade.com Mirror (Score:2)
Re:X-Arcade.com Mirror (Score:2)
Since Akamai caches for 1d (I've set it to do that), it pretty much ensures that it will stay up at least long enough for the site to recover from the slashdot effect.
Re:X-Arcade.com Mirror (Score:2)
Re:Just can't beat (Score:2)
Re:Just can't beat (Score:1)
It just seems that specialized gaming input devices are quite rare, or at least where I live.
Re:Just can't beat (Score:1)
After deciphering your post, I have to agree. These kind of controllers were actually fairly common about ten years ago, but only on consoles. I have a Capcom Fighter Power Stick here that I'm sure would be awesome if I could somehow use it on the PC. Fortunately, I just found this [lik-sang.com]. It seems pretty inexpensive for what it does - I think I'm going to give it a shot.
Re:Just can't beat (Score:1)
Re:Linux drivers (Score:4, Informative)